The Contractual Fiancée
Chapter Five
The Journal That Breathed
By dawn, Lake Tahoe looked like a secret the world had forgotten to finish telling.
Mist curled over the water in long silver ribbons, drifting between the pine trees and the glassy shore as if the lake itself had exhaled in its sleep. The cabin sat above it all, tucked into the mountain like an old promise—wooden beams, stone chimney, wide windows, and one impossible bedroom that Olivia Jackson had still not forgiven fate for arranging.
She had slept badly.
Not because the bed was uncomfortable.
Not because the mountain air was too cold.
And not because Rowan DeVille had taken the sofa downstairs without complaint, stretching his long frame across it like a man who had slept in worse places and never bothered to mention them.
No.
Olivia had slept badly because the journal had whispered her name.
Olivia...
A soft voice.
Old.
Feminine.
Not quite inside the room, not quite inside her head.
Then the pages of the ancient California journal had fluttered open by themselves on the table beside the bed, even though every window had been shut, every draft blocked, and the fire downstairs had burned low hours before midnight.
She had stared at it from beneath the blankets, heart pounding, too proud to scream and too frightened to move.
Then, written across the page in ink that had not been there before, one sentence appeared:
Love is not chosen. It is recognized.
Olivia had not slept after that.
Now she stood in the kitchen wrapped in an oversized cream sweater, her curls pinned messily atop her head, one hand around a mug of coffee and the other pressed against the old leather journal as though she could keep it from doing anything else supernatural before breakfast.
Across the room, Rowan was already awake.
Of course he was.
Men like Rowan DeVille probably woke before danger did.
He stood near the window in a black thermal shirt and jeans, speaking quietly into his phone. His hair was still damp from a shower. His jaw carried the shadow of sleeplessness, but somehow that only made him look more dangerous, more alive, more annoyingly handsome.
Olivia hated that she noticed.
She hated even more that when he ended the call and turned toward her, his eyes went straight to her hand.
“The journal again?” he asked.
Olivia lifted her chin. “Good morning to you too.”
His mouth curved slightly. “Good morning, contractual fiancée.”
“Do not call me that before coffee.”
“You’re holding coffee.”
“Then do not call me that while I am deciding whether to throw coffee.”
Rowan’s smile deepened, but it faded when the journal gave one soft, almost human sigh beneath Olivia’s palm.
Both of them froze.
The sound was barely there.
A breath through paper.
A living thing trying not to be heard.
Rowan crossed the kitchen in three strides. “Tell me that was the cabin settling.”
Olivia slowly removed her hand.
The journal opened.
Not dramatically. Not with a gust of wind. Not like in a movie.
It opened gently, almost politely, as if the book had manners.
The pages turned one by one until they stopped on a drawing Olivia had never seen before: a woman rising from a black sea, crowned with gold, her arms lifted toward a sky full of stars. Around her stood other women—warriors, scholars, healers, guardians. Behind them was a veil, painted in shimmering ink that seemed to move when Olivia looked directly at it.
Rowan leaned closer. “Queen Califia.”
Olivia swallowed. “Yes.”
“You’re sure?”
“My whole childhood was built on wanting to know more about her,” Olivia whispered. “California history. Mission stories. My mother’s relatives in Redwood City. Old journals, old maps, old names people forgot or tried to erase.”
She touched the edge of the drawing carefully.
“But this… this is different.”
The ink warmed beneath her fingertip.
Rowan’s expression sharpened. “Olivia.”
Before she could pull away, the room changed.
The kitchen disappeared.
The smell of coffee vanished.
The cabin, the window, the pine trees—gone.
Olivia stood barefoot on black sand beneath a violet sky.
A vast lake stretched before her, only it was not Tahoe. Not exactly. The water was darker, deeper, reflecting stars that did not belong to morning. Across the surface rose a woman’s voice, rich and low, carrying the weight of centuries.
The Archive wakes when blood remembers.
Olivia tried to speak, but her voice failed.
Beside her, Rowan stood rigid, his hand instinctively reaching for hers.
This time, she did not pull away.
A figure appeared in the lake’s reflection.
Not on the shore.
Not in the sky.
In the water.
A queen crowned in gold.
Her face was beautiful, fierce, and sorrowful.
Queen Califia.
Olivia’s breath caught.
The queen’s eyes lifted, and though she existed only in reflection, Olivia felt seen all the way through.
The contract binds nothing. The choice binds everything.
The lake trembled.
Then another reflection appeared behind the queen.
A man.
Thin.
Gray-haired.
Wearing dark gloves.
Holding a small golden artifact shaped like a sunburst.
Rowan’s hand tightened around Olivia’s.
“Graves,” he said.
The vision shattered.
The kitchen returned with violent suddenness.
Olivia stumbled backward, and Rowan caught her against him. For one suspended moment, she was pressed to his chest, her hands gripping his arms, his heartbeat pounding hard beneath her palm.
Neither of them moved.
Neither of them spoke.
Then the journal snapped shut.
Olivia jumped.
Rowan did not let go right away.
“You saw him too,” she said.
“Yes.”
“Dr. Graves.”
“Yes.”
“With an artifact.”
“Yes.”
Olivia pulled back slowly, trying to gather herself. “Then the Trust was telling the truth.”
Rowan’s jaw tightened. “Or enough of the truth to make us useful.”
That landed between them like a blade.
The Trust.
The family legacy.
The engagement requirement.
The impossible will.
The fake relationship neither of them had wanted.
Olivia looked toward the journal. “What is the Archive?”
Rowan’s silence answered before he did.
“You know something,” she said.
“I know pieces.”
“Then start sharing pieces.”
He looked out toward the lake. “My grandfather used to say the Archive wasn’t a place. It was a memory system. Journals, maps, artifacts, bloodlines, stories. A living record of California before people tried to flatten it into one version.”
Olivia’s pulse quickened. “And Queen Califia?”
“The center of it.”
“The myth?”
“The warning.”
A chill moved through her.
Rowan turned back to her. “Some families protected pieces of the Archive. Some exploited them. Some forgot what they were guarding until the wrong people came looking.”
“Like Graves.”
“Like Graves.”
Olivia picked up the journal, though every sensible part of her screamed not to touch it again. “Why would he want the artifact?”
Rowan’s face hardened. “Because if the stories are true, the artifacts don’t just record history. They unlock it.”
“What does that mean?”
“It means history can be awakened.”
Olivia stared at him. “That is not an answer. That is a nightmare wearing a poetic hat.”
Despite everything, Rowan almost smiled. “You always talk like that when you’re scared?”
“I talk better when I’m scared.”
“Good. Then keep talking.”
She narrowed her eyes. “You are enjoying this.”
“No,” he said quietly. “I am trying not to think about what happens if Graves already has the first piece.”
The first piece.
Olivia looked down at the journal. “The vision showed him with it.”
“Yes.”
“Where?”
Rowan crossed to the table and pulled out one of the maps they had found the night before.
“That’s what we need to figure out.”
The map was brittle and hand-drawn, showing the Tahoe shoreline, old trails, hidden coves, and marks that did not appear on any modern map. Olivia had spent half the night studying it by lamplight. She had thought the symbols were decorative.
Now one of them glowed faintly.
A small gold sunburst near the eastern ridge.
Olivia leaned over it. “That wasn’t glowing yesterday.”
“No.”
“Please tell me you have a calm, normal explanation.”
“I jumped out of a helicopter two days ago.”
“That is not calm or normal.”
“Exactly.”
The glowing mark pulsed once.
Then again.
Like a heartbeat.
Olivia’s stomach dropped. “It’s calling us.”
Rowan folded the map. “Then we go.”
She stepped back. “Absolutely not.”
“Olivia—”
“No. Do not ‘Olivia’ me in that deep rescue-hero voice. We are not hiking into the mountains because a haunted map blinked at us.”
“If Graves has the artifact, we need to know where he found it.”
“We need to call the Trust.”
“I already did.”
She blinked. “When?”
“This morning.”
“And?”
“They didn’t answer.”
That frightened her more than she wanted to admit.
The Trust had orchestrated everything. The gathering. The will. The engagement clause. The cabin. The journals. The families.
They had been intrusive, secretive, manipulative.
But silent?
That felt worse.
Olivia walked to the window. The lake was brightening now, blue spreading beneath the mist. Beautiful. Peaceful. Deceptive.
“You think something happened to them,” she said.
“I think Graves moved faster than they expected.”
“And now we are supposed to fix it?”
Rowan came to stand beside her. “No. We are supposed to survive long enough to understand what they pulled us into.”
She looked up at him. “And the engagement?”
His eyes softened for half a second. “Still fake.”
“Good.”
“Mostly.”
Her breath caught.
Rowan seemed to realize what he had said at the same time she did.
The air changed.
Warmth moved between them, dangerous and unwanted.
Olivia turned away first. “We should go before I decide to hit you with the haunted journal.”
“Fair.”
They prepared quickly.
Rowan packed with military efficiency: flashlight, rope, first-aid kit, water, protein bars, knife, emergency blanket, satellite communicator.
Olivia packed the journal, the map, two pens, her phone, and an attitude large enough to frighten wildlife.
Outside, the morning was cold enough to bite.
The trail began behind the cabin, climbing through pine and granite, with Lake Tahoe flashing between the trees like blue glass. For the first mile, they walked in silence.
Olivia told herself it was because the terrain required focus.
Not because Rowan kept offering his hand over rocks and she kept taking it.
Not because his touch felt steadier than it should.
Not because each time he released her, something inside her noticed the absence.
Finally, she said, “You are very irritating.”
Rowan glanced back. “That came out of nowhere.”
“No, it did not. It has been building.”
“What did I do now?”
“You are competent.”
He stopped. “That irritates you?”
“Yes.”
“Why?”
“Because reckless, arrogant men are supposed to be useless when actual danger appears.”
“I apologize for disappointing you.”
“You should.”
He laughed under his breath, and the sound moved through her before she could stop it.
They continued upward.
The glowing symbol on the map brightened as they neared the ridge. The journal grew warmer in Olivia’s bag. Once, she thought she heard singing—women’s voices layered in harmony, distant and aching—but when she stopped, the forest was silent.
Too silent.
No birds.
No insects.
No wind.
Rowan noticed too.
He lifted a hand, signaling her to stop.
Olivia froze.
Ahead, between two pines, something shimmered.
At first she thought it was sunlight.
Then the shimmer widened.
A vertical curtain hung between the trees, nearly invisible except where the morning light bent around it. It looked like heat rising off pavement, except the air was cold and the shape was too deliberate.
A veil.
The Living Veil.
Olivia whispered, “Rowan.”
“I see it.”
The journal in her bag pulsed hard.
The veil rippled.
On the other side, Olivia saw something impossible.
Not forest.
Not Tahoe.
A stone chamber.
Candles burning blue.
Shelves filled with journals.
Gold artifacts resting beneath glass.
And standing in the center of it all—
Dr. Graves.
He turned as if he sensed them watching.
His pale eyes met Olivia’s through the veil.
Then he smiled.
A slow, satisfied smile.
He lifted the sunburst artifact.
The air cracked.
Rowan grabbed Olivia and pulled her back just as a blast of golden light tore through the veil and struck the tree where her head had been.
Bark exploded.
Olivia screamed.
Rowan threw her behind a boulder and covered her body with his own as splinters rained down around them.
The veil flickered violently.
Graves’ voice slipped through it, calm and intimate.
“Miss Jackson. Mr. DeVille. How kind of the Trust to send me the heirs.”
Olivia’s blood turned cold.
Rowan rose to one knee, positioning himself between her and the veil.
“Run when I tell you.”
“No.”
“Olivia.”
“No. I am done being moved around like a chess piece by men with secrets.”
The journal flew out of her bag.
It hovered in midair.
Pages whipped open with furious speed until they stopped on a blank page. Ink bled upward from nowhere, forming words one line at a time.
THE FIRST ARTIFACT HAS BEEN TAKEN.
THE SECOND MUST NOT BE FOUND.
ONE GUARDIAN WILL BETRAY THE OTHER.
Olivia stopped breathing.
Rowan read the words.
Then slowly, his gaze shifted to her.
Before either of them could speak, the veil split open wider.
And from the other side, Dr. Graves stepped through.
He was holding Rowan’s family ring in his gloved hand.
“Ask him,” Graves said softly, smiling at Olivia. “Ask your fiancé why his blood opened the Archive for me.”
End of Chapter Five
Cliff-hanger: Dr. Graves reveals Rowan’s bloodline may have helped open the Archive—and Olivia must decide whether the man she is pretending to love has already betrayed her.
Next Chapter:
Chapter Six: The Blood That Opened the Door









